RT @BradleyKBusch: Is cognitive science just for maths/science? Nope. 📖 English - using cognitive load theory to teach Shakespeare https:/…
RT @BradleyKBusch: Is cognitive science just for maths/science? Nope. 📖 English - using cognitive load theory to teach Shakespeare https:/…
Is cognitive science just for maths/science? Nope. 📖 English - using cognitive load theory to teach Shakespeare https://t.co/gGkjIDlNTA 🖌️Art - using interleaving to teach about artists https://t.co/SEgNicOUDU
@BarbaraBleiman @C_Hendrick This study may be of interest 😀https://t.co/gGkjIDlNTA
@HoDEng_Med @pedagogymatters Think you would like this article https://t.co/aKEdfhKZcJ
The introduction in this paper beautifully explains the redundancy, split-attention and (obvs) expertise reversal effects. https://t.co/ukU910PJ9K
RT @cbokhove: @adamboxer1 @rachelrossiter @ryandal @oboelizzy @DSGhataura @RadicalMusic1 @tombennett71 ERE can be relevant earlier as can b…
@adamboxer1 @rachelrossiter @ryandal @oboelizzy @DSGhataura @RadicalMusic1 @tombennett71 ERE can be relevant earlier as can be about 'relative expert'. https://t.co/z9ldMwqumz is a nice special issue.
RT @NSMWells: This is really interesting for anyone who teaches Shakespeare to novice readers. #teamenglish https://t.co/daaYq1dWww
RT @HFletcherWood: 1) The redundancy and expertise reversal effects apply when studying Shakespeare too: guided instruction matters ($) htt…
RT @HFletcherWood: 1) The redundancy and expertise reversal effects apply when studying Shakespeare too: guided instruction matters ($) htt…
RT @HFletcherWood: 1) The redundancy and expertise reversal effects apply when studying Shakespeare too: guided instruction matters ($) htt…
RT @HFletcherWood: 1) The redundancy and expertise reversal effects apply when studying Shakespeare too: guided instruction matters ($) htt…
RT @HFletcherWood: 1) The redundancy and expertise reversal effects apply when studying Shakespeare too: guided instruction matters ($) htt…
This is really interesting for anyone who teaches Shakespeare to novice readers. #teamenglish https://t.co/daaYq1dWww
1) The redundancy and expertise reversal effects apply when studying Shakespeare too: guided instruction matters ($) https://t.co/yl0Tv0IPd3 https://t.co/wBxejL0Gqa
Just read abstract of this. I'm not well-read on cogsci, but Expertise Reversal Effect sounds interesting https://t.co/hNUvtCIAyB https://t.co/FPvSK6bmKx
Would love to be able to read full research (can't afford it). Seems to reinforce intuition? https://t.co/jVJ97bD37N
Sndary Shakespeare guided -> Expertise reversal effect in using explanatory notes for readers of Shakespearean text https://t.co/z9ldMwqumz